"You love who you love," but apparently not forever. John Mayer and Katy Perry have broken up (again), a source close to the celebrity pair says. They appeared together at the Grammys last month but Mayer, 36, didn't join the 29-year-old "Dark Horse" singer on her most recent trips to London and Milan. Their romance went very public last year as Mayer released "Who You Love," a duet with Perry, on his latest album and even sparked engagement rumors when she was spotted wearing a diamond sparkler on her ring finger this past month. But for now, it looks like their on-again, off-again romance is off. Again.» Read more at E! News.

Variety reports "The Warriors" actor Roger Hill has died at 65 in New York. The actor appeared mostly in theater productions throughout his career, but famously played Cyrus, the gang leader who said "Can you dig it?" in a big speech for the 1979 cult classic. Hill also appeared on the soap opera "One Life to Live" as Alec Lowndes from 1982 to 1985. He later left acting to write poetry, but made headlines again in 2005 when he sued Rockstar Games for using his voice in a video game based on the "Warriors" movie. He is survived by his son, "Big Brother" editor Chris W. Hill.

Bryan Cranston freaks out in the latest "Godzilla" trailer -- an appropriate reaction for fans excited to see the legendary movie monster return to the big screen. The new two-and-a-half-minute preview features a closeup of the Japanese creature, who looks much scarier than his counterpart in the 1998 box office bomb starring Matthew Broderick. "The arrogance of man is thinking Nature is in our control, and not the other way around," Ken Watanabe says. Also starring Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Elizabeth Olsen, "Godzilla" roars into theaters on May 16.

Despite the loss of Dr. Egon Spengler, "Ghostbusters 3" is still moving forward. Harold Ramis played the bespectacled scientist and co-wrote the first two "Ghostbusters" movies, and had reportedly signed on to appear in the long-awaited sequel with Dan Aykroyd and (maybe, probably not) Bill Murray. Sources close to Sony Pictures say Ramis' death will only require minor script changes, as the new film focuses on a new generation of ghostbusters with the original cast in smaller roles. A production date hasn't been set yet, but filming likely won't happen this year.» Read more at Slash Film.